Showing posts with label transportation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label transportation. Show all posts

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Red-light cameras as money-making devices

A red-light camera in use in Beaverton, Oregon...

Image via Wikipedia

Many transport researchers jumped on the idea of having red-light cameras installed on intersections where running red lights is a common occurrence. They were motivated by the fact that such devices improve traffic safety.

City officials, on the other hand, used these devices to generate millions in revenue. The manufacturer of such devices invested heavily in the campaigns of local politicians who later doled out lucrative contracts to the manufacturers.

Problems arose when the drivers became smart and stopped violating as much resulting in a massive drop in convictions and revenue.

Read more on this below.

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Drivers Stopping Means Red-Light Cameras Don’t Yield Cash Goals

July 6 (Bloomberg) -- Miami, which counted on $10 million in fines from motorists caught on camera running red lights, is planning to furlough some workers in part because penalties didn’t come close to forecasts as drivers began obeying the law.

Houston, where voters banned cameras in November, will receive about $10 million less than anticipated and faces a potential claim from supplier American Traffic Solutions Inc. for canceling a contract. The Los Angeles Police Commission voted last month to let its agreement with American Traffic expire, citing the expense.

Since cameras began spying on motorists in the late 1980s, they’ve faced lawsuits challenging their constitutionality, been banned in voter initiatives and restricted by legislation. That hasn’t stopped U.S. cities from deploying them: The number of municipalities with cameras has doubled to 539 since 2007, according to the Washington-based Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.

“This is about money and not about safety,” Ted Hollander, a Fort Lauderdale attorney who defends people charged with traffic offenses, said in an interview.

Redflex Holdings Ltd., a South Melbourne, Australia-based camera supplier, successfully defended itself against lawsuits challenging its product in 10 states last year and legislation that would ban them in six, according to its annual report.

An Arizona employee of the company was shot and killed while monitoring a speed-detecting camera in 2009.

Enforcement Battleground

“Photo enforcement is very much a battleground,” said Gary Biller, executive director of the Waunakee, Wisconsin-based National Motorists Association, a drivers’ rights organization.

The group’s website lists 10 reasons for opposing cameras, including that vehicle owners who get tickets in the mail may be forced to snitch on friends or family who borrowed their car.

Studies diverge on whether cameras, which have been endorsed by the World Health Organization and the National Safety Council, actually reduce traffic accidents.

A September 2007 review by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration concluded they reduced fatal side-angle collisions. It also said less-serious rear-end collisions increased as drivers braked after spotting cameras.

“These cameras are never installed as revenue generators,” said Charles Territo, a spokesman for American Traffic in Scottsdale, Arizona. “They are installed with the purpose of enhancing public safety.”

Cost-Neutral Contracts

Most contracts are “cost neutral,” Territo said.

“A city will never pay more in fees than the cameras generate,” he said. “If a camera is contracted at $4,000 a month and it generates $6,000, they pay $4,000. But if the cameras generate $2,000, they only pay that.”

In Florida, where legislation allowed cameras beginning last year, American Traffic donated $159,000 to state-level candidates and committees during the 2010 election cycle, according to the Florida Elections Division. The payments included $64,500 to Florida’s Republican Party and $37,500 to the Democratic Party.

The state, which splits camera revenue with cities, expects about a third less income than initially projected from the program, according to a March report from the Legislature’s research office.

There are 28 class-action lawsuits in Florida against municipalities related to the cameras, said Michael Popok, a partner with Weiss, Serota, Helfman, Pastoriza, Cole & Boniske in Coral Gables, Florida, who represents six cities.

Warning Signs

“If it was really about the money, we’d hide the cameras,” Popok said. “There are big signs warning people that they’re there.”

The lawsuits had a “slightly chilling effect” on the rollout, leading to the lower revenue, said Amy Baker, the Florida Legislature’s chief economist. Territo disagreed, saying 80 communities in the state use cameras.

Miami planned for $10 million from 32 cameras installed this year. Instead, projected revenue is less than $2 million, Mayor Tomas Regalado said in an interview. The shortfall will contribute to a $15 million projected fiscal 2012 budget deficit that may force the city to give employees unpaid days off one day a week.

Miami based its estimate on tickets issued at comparable intersections in other cities, Regalado said. Visibility of the cameras and news coverage led to fewer violations, a 25 percent reduction in accidents and less revenue.

“They worked too well,” Regalado said.

Goldman Investment

American Traffic, which supplied Miami’s cameras, had 19 cities sign up in the first six months of this year, Territo said. The closely held company received an investment in 2008 from Goldman Sachs Group Inc., which remains a stakeholder.

Redflex’s stock plunged 30 percent on May 10 after shareholders rejected a takeover offer from Macquarie Group Ltd. and Carlyle Group, a private-equity firm. On June 17, Carlyle announced it had withdrawn as an investor in Redflex. The firm, which held a 12 percent stake in February, didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Los Angeles has seen a 62 percent reduction in red-light- related collisions at its 32 camera-monitored intersections since 2004 and no increase in rear-end crashes, according to a report Chief Charlie Beck gave the Police Commission last month.

The program would cost the city $2.3 million over three years if American Traffic is kept as the contractor at the same intersections, the report said. Territo said the estimate includes costs not directly tied to cameras and that the contract could be structured so the city doesn’t lose money.

Lapsed Contract

The five-member commission voted unanimously June 7 to let the contract expire. During a public meeting, it cited the department’s $41 million deficit, potential changes in California law that could increase the program’s expenses and the City Council’s boycott of Arizona-based companies over the state’s immigration law.

Houston, which raised almost $16 million in fiscal 2010 with red-light monitors, stopped ticketing in November after residents voted to turn off its 70 cameras by amending the city charter. The city received about $10 million less than expected because of the ban, according to budget documents.

That loss was “one of numerous factors” contributing to a budget deficit for fiscal 2011, which ended June 30, said Janice Evans, a spokeswoman for Mayor Annise Parker.

A judge ruled last month that the vote, where 53 percent of residents favored stopping the cameras, wasn’t valid and couldn’t be used to end American Traffic’s contract.

The company maintains Houston must honor its agreement, Territo said. The city hasn’t decided whether it’s going to resume the program, Evans said.

The unpopularity of red-light cameras has spawned a business in alerting drivers when they may be photographed. Radar detectors linked to satellites and centralized databases can tip off motorists before the shutters snap.

“Public opinion is awful on the cameras,” said Aaron Thomas, a marketing manager at Escort Inc., a West Chester, Ohio-based maker of warning devices. “Everyone’s looking for a solution to get around them.”

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Friday, December 24, 2010

Is the economy really recovering?

The for-hire motor carrier freight services price index has maintained its upward trend since the first quarter of 2009. The price index collapsed in the middle of 2008 indicating the slow-down in the economy and the resulting lower demand for freight services.

The moderate, yet sustained, increase in the price of freight services since early 2009 suggest that the demand for such services has been increasing in Canada, albeit at a slower pace. The couriers and messengers services price index also exhibited a moderate increase of 0.2% in November over October. The year-over-year increase was 2.7%, again a moderate increase in the cost of doing business in Canada.

This should be welcome news because the price pressures are moderate in Canada and conducive for sustained economic growth.

Source: Statistics Canada

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

A $60 million surplus in transit operations: Wishful thinking or creative accounting

As someone who researches and teaches transit planning, I was simply shocked to see TTC projecting a $60 million surplus for 2010. For this surplus to realize either the principles of accounting have to be held in abeyance or the dictionary’s definition of surplus has to be updated.

TTC’s own data for 2009 showed operating expenses at $1.33 billion and operating revenues of $886.4 million. Thus the operating deficit (not surplus) for 2009 equalled $442.3 million.

TTC is projecting 480 million trips (riders) for 2010, roughly 9 million more riders than it carried in 2009. Even with the fare-hike in January 2010 and the additional 9 million riders, a $442.3 million deficit cannot be turned into a $60 million surplus simply because TTC’s operating revenue per trip will still be around $2, which is not sufficient to generate a surplus. Consider that the operating revenue per trip in 2009 was merely $1.88. This is because not everyone pays the full fare, thanks to volume discounts and lower fares for adults, students and others. In addition, TTC employees make millions of trips a year for work, which contribute to the total annual ridership, but not a dime to the revenue.

Furthermore, in 2009 wages, salaries, and benefits accounted for over a billion dollars in operating expenses, representing  over 70% of the total expenses. Because of wage pressures, TTC’s operating expenses will be higher in 2010. The savings in fuel costs and increase in ad revenue are too miniscule to turn TTC’s fortunes. 

What is of interest is that the price elasticity of transit demand has been turned on its head. I remember Richard Soberman, the guru of public transportation, mentioning in his lecture at the University of Toronto in 1997 that the price elasticity of transit demand is around –0.3. This suggests that a 10% increase in transit fare may result in a 3% decline in transit ridership, at least in the short run. Well, that’s no longer true for Toronto. A significant fare hike in January 2010 has not been accompanied with a decline in ridership.

One should, however, note that 2008 and 2009 witnessed a slowdown in economic activity, which often coincides with low transit ridership. The projected increase in transit ridership in 2010 could simply be the result of economic growth, as well as population growth, in the GTA.

Also of interest is the fact that TTC is suggesting that the increase in ridership has been realized on bus routes in the suburbs. I have long argued for a greater recognition of buses as the lynchpin of transit systems. Without the feeder bus networks, subways would simply collapse.

Globe and Mail, December 14, 2010

John Lorinc: The TTC is cruising toward an unprecedented $60-million surplus for 2010 thanks to a combination of increased ridership, stronger ad sales, cheaper fuel and the surprising resilience of Toronto commuters in the face of last winter’s controversial fare hikes.

“We've had surpluses [in the past], but nothing this big,” said TTC general secretary Vince Rodo.

The results are part of TTC chief general manager Gary Webster’s third-quarter report, to be presented at the commission’s inaugural meeting Wednesday.

What’s less clear, however, is whether Mayor Rob Ford and his budget chair, Mike Del Grande, will now ask the TTC to make do with a smaller subsidy for 2011 in light of the agency’s surprisingly robust performance. Mr. Del Grande couldn’t be reached for comment Monday.

The TTC last year received a $430-million operating subsidy from council, and a further $83-million for Wheel-Trans. “We’re going to be asking for the same subsidy level we asked for in 2010,” TTC spokesperson Brad Ross said.

But new TTC chair Karen Stintz appears to be leaving the door open for a rollback. “The commission will consider the options presented by the surplus at the January meeting,” said a spokesperson for Ms. Stintz.

Mr. Rodo says the TTC’s fare revenues were $41-million ahead of projections for 2010, with a record-setting 480 million riders expected this year or about four per cent more than the agency had estimated. High unemployment and fare hikes, such as the one imposed earlier in the year, generally result in fewer riders. But Mr. Rodo said the TTC benefited because many Torontonians are looking to save money, either by taking transit or purchasing Metropasses.

Increased traffic on bus routes accounted for the bulk of the ridership growth, he added. To meet demand, TTC officials cancelled two rounds of service reductions planned for March and September.

The TTC also saw a $3-million bump in its advertising revenues because of the ridership growth.

On the expense side of the ledger, Mr. Rodo said TTC officials have moved to purchasing diesel on the so-called spot market rather than locking into longer-term futures contracts. Typically, futures contracts allow the TTC to hedge against rising energy prices. But in recent months, the agency has found it more economical to buy short-term supplies.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Globalization of trade and rights: Bangladeshi workers demand decent wages

The secret behind the success of rapid increase in the Bangladeshi textile exports is fast unfolding. Subjected to undignified wages, the textile workers suffered as the North American and European consumers enjoyed their clothes delivered by the retailers who outsourced not just manufacturing, but the exploitation of workers.

Inadequate labour laws in Bangladesh and other similar places has resulted in the continued suffering of workers who are now on the street campaigning for their rights or jumping to their death off the roofs of the same factories that make designer labels and technical gizmos for companies as reputed as Apple.

The following is from BBC:

At least three people were killed and dozens more injured when police in Bangladesh clashed with garment factory workers demanding better pay, police have said.Security forces beating garment workers in Chittagong, Bangladesh, 12 December 2010

Police used batons and tear gas to disperse thousands of protesters in Dhaka and Chittagong.

The unrest came a day after demonstrations shut down factories in southern Bangladesh.

The workers say wages have not gone up, even though rises were due last month.

Police tried to disperse protesters attacking factories and smashing vehicles in Chittagong Export Procession Zone (CEPZ) on Sunday, police official Reza al-Hasan said.

Local media said one of the men killed was a 35-year-old rickshaw puller in Chittagong, but it was unclear how he had died.

All three victims were reportedly shot dead. At least 50 people were injured during the unrest in Chittagong.  Almost all factories in the CEPZ are closed because of the protests, officials said.

The BBC's Anbarasan Ethirajan, in Dhaka, says demonstrations on Saturday forced a South Korean company to shut down all its 11 factories there.

Scores more were injured in Dhaka, where thousands of workers gathered outside their factory in an industrial area of the city early in the morning in protest against its closure as a result of the disturbances.

Roads in Dhaka were blocked and at least two vehicles set on fire, police said.

Labour unions say many of the factories are not implementing the new salary scale announced by a government wage board earlier this year.

From November, the factories should have been paying a wage of at least $43 (£27) a month.

Around Dhaka, workers in some factories have been protesting for a number of days, demanding increased pay.

More than three million people, mostly women, work in Bangladesh's garment industry, which supplies many major Western stores and is a key sector of the country's economy.

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Prince Rupert, always a day sooner

Prince Rupert, Canada’s third largest deep seaport is unique in North America for offering the shortest freight commute to Asian ports. Canadian National Railways offer the following transit times to Asia:

Vessel transit times:

Prince Rupert to Tianjin 15 days
Prince Rupert to Shanghai 14 days
Prince Rupert to Qingdao 14 days
Prince Rupert to Guangzhou 17 days
Prince Rupert to Hong Kong 16 days
Vancouver to Tianjin 16 days
Vancouver to Shanghai 16 days
Vancouver to Qingdao 16 days
Vancouver to Guangzhou 18 days
Vancouver to Hong Kong 18 days

http://www.cn.ca/en/shipping-china-asia-north-america-grain.htm

Thursday, July 29, 2010

A sneak peak at the new census questionnaire

While the controversy over the 2011 census in Canada continues, Statistics Canada, the agency responsible for holding Census in Canada, has released the draft questionnaire for review.

There are a few changes in the questionnaire that may make transport planners happy.

Here is a brief list of the changes that I could spot:

  1. Question 33 about unpaid work or “care economy” has been removed. It appears that the National Statistics Council had already decided upon this question, but made it look like a new suggestion in their press release two days ago. This needs more probing. The exact timing of NSC’s recommendation to exclude question about unpaid work should be established.
  2. Questions about childcare expenses have been included.
  3. Also included are questions about child support paid to former spouses.
    1. This development is interesting. The question about unpaid work, which predominantly dealt with women’s non-monetised contribution to economy and society, has been removed and a question about child support, that affects men predominantly, has been included.
  4. Transport planners should be delighted to note that in addition to the questions about the mode of travel to work, and work location, the questionnaire in 2011 will collect info on the following:
    1. Average travel time for home to work trip
    2. Departure time for home to work trip
    3. Car pooling, i.e., number of people travelling together to work in the same vehicle
    4. The mode of travel question has also been enhanced by asking details about public transit, i.e., differentiating between buses, subways, street cars, and regional rail.
      1. The question is phrased poorly as it will most likely report lower mode split for buses for multi-modal trips.
  5. And yes, the survey will be voluntary, not mandatory!

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Lastly, I think it is not too early to start thinking about putting up a legal challenge to the government’s decision to make the survey voluntary. It is indeed  not going to be easy because the courts would not like to interfere/override the authority of the minister (executive) as enshrined in the constitution. However, there are ways to make this happen and universities with faculties of law and businesses with legal departments may want to start looking for those whose welfare will be adversely impacted by this decision and help such aggrieved parties litigate.

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